Andrew Tarantola

Losing a computer containing unencrypted ISS codes earned NASA a stern talking-to from a House subcommittee but apparently didn't change many attitudes. NASA's just lost another and this time, it contained the personal information of every NASA employee in Kansas City.

NASA is the target of some scary hacks and and digital espionage. But if someone out there has…
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According to an internal memo from Tracy Wetrich, NASA's HR Director, leaked to SpaceRef, the incident occurred on March 5th. The laptop contained "information on NASA KSC employees such as name, social security number, race, national origin, gender, contact phone number, e-mail, date of birth, college affiliation, and grade point average." Basically, an identity thief's wet dream. The computer is password-protected, which should at least prevent casual snooping, and NASA doesn't believe it was stolen specifically for the personal information.

Still, you'd think that an agency created during the cold war to compete with the Soviet Union, is constantly being hacked, and houses all sorts of state secrets would have a more comprehensive security setup beyond "Just don't lose it". [SpaceRef - Image: Ljupco Smokovski/ Shutterstock]